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List of interface bit rates
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===[[Wireless network]]s=== [[802.11]] networks in infrastructure mode are half-duplex; all stations share the medium. In infrastructure or access point mode, all traffic has to pass through an [[wireless access point|Access Point]] (AP). Thus, two stations on the same access point that are communicating with each other must have each and every frame transmitted twice: from the sender to the access point, then from the access point to the receiver. This approximately halves the effective bandwidth. 802.11 networks in ad hoc mode are still half-duplex, but devices communicate directly rather than through an access point. In this mode all devices must be able to ''see'' each other, instead of only having to be able to ''see'' the access point. {|class="wikitable sortable" |- ! Standard !! colspan=2 | Maximum Link Rate !! Year |- | [[WaveLAN|Classic WaveLAN]] || align=right | '''{{val|2|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|250|u=kB/s}} || 1988 |- | [[IEEE 802.11]] || align=right | '''{{val|2|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|250|u=kB/s}} || 1997 |- | [[RONJA]] (full duplex) || align=right | '''{{val|10|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|1.25|u=MB/s}} || 2001 |- | [[IEEE 802.11a]] || align=right | '''{{val|54|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|6.75|u=MB/s}} || 1999 |- | [[IEEE 802.11b]] || align=right | '''{{val|11|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|1.375|u=MB/s}} || 1999 |- | [[IEEE 802.11g]] || align=right | '''{{val|54|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|6.75|u=MB/s}} || 2003 |- | [[IEEE 802.16]] (WiMAX) || align=right | '''{{val|70|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|8.75|u=MB/s}} || 2004 |- | [[Super G (wireless networking)|IEEE 802.11g with<br/>Super G]] by Atheros || align=right | '''{{val|108|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|13.5|u=MB/s}} || 2003 |- | [[125 High Speed Mode|IEEE 802.11g with 125 High<br/>Speed Mode]] by Broadcom || align=right | '''{{val|125|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|15.625|u=MB/s}} || 2003 |- | IEEE 802.11g with Nitro by Conexant || align=right | '''{{val|140|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|17.5|u=MB/s}} || 2003 |- | [[IEEE 802.11n]] (aka Wi-Fi 4) || align=right | '''{{val|600|u=Mbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|75|u=MB/s}} || 2009 |- | [[IEEE 802.11ac]] (aka Wi-Fi 5) || align=right | '''{{val|6.8|β|6.93|u=Gbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|850|β|866.25|u=MB/s}} || 2012 |- | [[IEEE 802.11ad]] || align=right | '''{{val|7.14|β|7.2|u=Gbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|892.5|β|900|u=MB/s}} || 2011 |- | [[IEEE 802.11ax]] (aka Wi-Fi 6/6E) || align=right | '''{{val|11|u=Gbit/s}}''' || align=right | {{val|1.375|u=GB/s}} || 2019 |- | [[IEEE 802.11be]] (aka Wi-Fi 7 or<br/>Extremely High Throughput (EHT)) || align=right | '''{{val|46.12|u=Gbit/s}}'''<br/>expected || align=right | {{val|5.765|u=GB/s}}<br/>expected || Late 2024<br/>expected |- | [[IEEE 802.11bn]] (aka Wi-Fi 8 or<br/>Ultra High Reliability (UHR)) || align=right | '''{{val|100|u=Gbit/s}}'''<br/>expected || align=right | {{val|12.5|u=GB/s}}<br/>expected || 2028<br/>expected |- | [[IEEE 802.11ay]] (aka Enhanced<br/>Throughput for Operation in License<br/>-exempt Bands above 45 GHz) || align=right | '''{{val|176|u=Gbit/s}}'''<br/>expected || align=right | {{val|22|u=GB/s}}<br/>expected ||March 2021<br/>standardized |}
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